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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1920, “Important § Event” & 4 DAYS only to select that Bedroom Suite and participate in the remarkable saving. OUR FASHION DISPLAY of the new 1920 line of Heaters at popular prices. THIRD FLOOR. OUR WINDOW DISPLAY of Blankets, Comforts, Pillows and Bedding of all kinds. WRERE PIKE MEETS FIFTH cofofojofojofojojofojofojole |Has Cupid Switched Over to August? COLUMBUS, Ohio, Sept. 1.—Aug- ust bids fair to knock out June as Cupid's favorite, In one day 25 I conses were tesued! And the daily average ts high, SBEEBE2020:C40:020202: 52:0:0:502502502588 fe wRist WATCHES DIAMOND RINGS AND WATCHES Louis Sidelsky Began Business as a Tailor in 1895—Has Made Clothes for Thousands in All Parts of the Northwest—Will Celebrate Twenty-fifth Anniversary With Tremendous Sale. Mary IT. Py EleanorHPortet COPYRIGHT 19:20 i Really, what a world of disappoint: jor Age!with somebody else, and shoot ment Use ie! Hlow on earth I'm go | that. one's lover, Or maybe some ing to stand being Mary for three | bod§d’ it@ to woot father, and I'd months more I don’t know, But I've| getatpere jam tn time to wave him got to, I suppone, I've been here |Oh, "TA Jove tfmt! May, June, and July; and that leaves Thiet th® ts @ real story, so, of August, September, and October yet | cougms, I tun't ppt in- anything only to come, And when I think of | justigh9? Happens, and nothing hap mother and Boston and Marie, and | pews, 5 the darling good times down there where you're really wanted, 1 am (Continued from yesterday) Rut there wasn't any twinkle tn his eyes, nor the least litte bit of | understanding smile; and 1 was dis appointed. I had been looking for | it. I knew then, when I felt so sud: | denly lost and heartachey, that I had been expecting and planning all day on that twinkly understanding «nile, You know you feel worse when you've just found a father and lost him! simply crazy, goink to be qpe. , Anyway, th And I had lost him. I knew it If futher wanted me, really wanted | a Mt 4 & sign ‘of one, t, Unlove it's the minute he sighed and frowned|™®, I wouldn't care a bit. I'd be) moghey. And.af course, I havent jand got up from his seat and said,} Willing to be Mary six whole months. | seen for thie months, so I can't “Oh, yea, to be sure.” He was just! Y¢% I'd be glud to. But he dc tj say Ady @ing Shour that Dr. Anderson then—the man who/|!'™ just here by order of the court knew all about the stars, and who|ANd what can you do when you're had been unmarried to mother, and| "thing but a daughter by order of who called me “Mary” in an of. |the court? course-you'remy-daughter tone of| Since the lessons have # eaten, father’s gone back to his Well, he took my books and Keard|™orning, Mary,” and “Goodnight,” my lessons, and told me what I wax|2Md nothing else, day in and day to study next day, He's done that |0Ut Lately he's got so he hangs | two days now. | around the house an awful lot, too, | Ob, I'm #0 tired of being Mary!/"° I can’t even do the things I did ve got more than four whole | the first of the month. I mean that of it left. 1 didn't I'd been playing some on the piano mother's letter today. Maybe that's | ong at the first, after school closed why I'm specially lonesome tonight. | AUPt Jane was out in the garden a) eee lot, and father out to the observ tory, #0 I just reveled in plano-play July first, ing till I found almost every time we School in done, both the regular); did it that he had come back, and | M'tkezover ‘the fence when I was school and my school, Not that mY/was in the library with the door |e oo the Wagon ne day. Then school has amounted to much. Re ‘ . oak. It was Uke thin daye he asked questions quite Uke! 4. On, 1 have to sew an hour, and aeereere2p Meret. ond bad just a teacher, ‘Then he got to talk | now T wave te reed ab eur, 405 wt an awfully long time talking ing. Sometimes it would be about! Sate Seid’ awash aon Lie @ent Jang gn the front pineza it would be about a star, or the on) tatty refused to have me “mons lc ee ames tis, ‘rey into the moon. And he'd get so interested) i,» ground,” so Aunt Jane had tole 4 Rompe” and t heard that I'd think for a minute that may-| 21. iat up. Susie's the one Pon Sh 4 5 [be the understanding twinkle would | 4'' 5 x § “GA Mr, A@ferson, I'm so glad I | unt Jane's afraid of, you see. She|sawhfwat I veyited to ask your ad Mawipoor dear Mr, Dar Abd. thats anetper ‘thing. the ve storfyst'm afraid th frotiiethien:, . trong ht Lian. lige aid before, quite a lot of thee! here to wee Aunt Jane, and pioroP lots of Umes evenings and Bfierngousg and I know now y do # They come then } Ahey Oink fa be at | hompe*@€ that tinie, and they want to wie. Ekné® it nay, tut I never thought “hii the oftier day when I heard our” “1 girl, Sosie, talking about jit hy Mrideet,. the Small's hired of her oem orig his eyes again. But it siways threatens to leave if any-| v4 moons, though, that he talked about Ih “ ™ ‘4 |It wax Boston, and mother, Yes, he | "er (ll Mrs. Small next door tat did, He talked a lot about mother. oer rete ee. pea ae An I look hack at it now, I can aoe |” Andersonville. that he did. He asked me all over} ASI said before, tf onty there was again what she did, and about the|*omebody here that wanted me. But | parties, and the folks that came to| there isn't. Of course father doesn't. | see her, He asked again aboot Mr,| That goes without saying. And Aunt Harlow, and about the concert, and Jane doesn't That goes, too, with the youn® man who played the vio./°Ut saying. Carrie Heywood bas lin, and what was his pame, and how | fo%¢ away for all summer, so T can't) old was he, and did I ike him. And| have even her; and of course, I) then, right in the middie of some | Wouldn't associate with any of the question, or rather, right in the mid | Other girls, even if they would as die of some answer I was giving | clafe with me—which they won't him, he would suddenly remember| That leaves only mother's letters he was hearing my lessona, and he| They are dear, and I love them. I would say, “Come, come, Mary, what|don't know what I'd do without has this to do with your lessons™ | them. And yet, sometimes I think Just as if I was to blame! (But,|™maybe they're worne than if I didn’t then, we women always get the|have them. They make me so home blame, Inotice.) And then he'd at-|#tck, and I always cry so after I get tend strictly to the books for maybe| them. Still, I know I just couldn't went on to tell him offer, but she it was a good mentzand whe felt so alone now with no: thong % shoulder to Jean upd d she would be #0 much obtiatt onty “he would tell her wetter he ‘conukiered thag offer a mmed and him and’asked him to please ait aid <¢ her what to do that Aig war eo alone in the world sine Poor’ dear Mr. Darling had © #@the aivsiys calls him poor q ir. Darling new, but Susie says shegelan’: when he wan alive; she ‘ eommthing quite different. WE tase’? Kot one. I'm sure of that)? 16e doonn's like ladies. 1 know | he ‘ H@ diways runs away Tet@bey don't run away) on wet, Anf whe told bim how} the prized, fis opinion, and he wagwt taan of Auch mplendia judg The Rhodes Kodaks, Enlargements, Picture F raming—Main Floor Smart Fall Suits At $45.00 Splendid Values at This Price * Short flare or straight belted styles, silk embroidered, braided, self straps and but- ton trim. Self or sealine fur collars. Fab- ries—Wool Velour in combination checks of Brown, Green, Blue and Black. Silvertone, Tricotine, Broadcloth and Serge in Plain Navy, African Brown, Taupe, Ming Blue, Deer and Black. All fancy silk lined. Sizes 16 years to 44 bust. LAYTIME is swiftly slip- ping to its close. In seven more days the old school bell will call forth an eager and anxious army of children. The chief requisite of this army is clothes—comfortable, properly fitted and serviceable Dresses, Suits, Coats and Hata Dresses For the girl between 6 and 16 we have Jack-Tar Dresses in plain blue and black and white check. Also one-piece dresses, easy to slip into, with grace ful lines, so essential to the growing girl A variety of styles in every wize. $12.50 to $27.50. Coats The question of a doat is readily answered in the pleas- ing display of Children’s and Misses’ Coats in plain colors or mixtures, fur trimmed or plain with or without lining. Sizes 6 to 16 years. $9.50 to $37.50. Children’s Hats Corresponding style and serviceableness are pgetty lit- tle hats felt, velour and trimmed with ribbon streamers plain ribbon bands. $2.50, $3.50, $4.95 and $12.50. in in beaver, Co. Girls’—Misses’—Boys’ Dresses - Coats - Suits Children’s Hats Boys’ Suits And for the sturdy lad there are practical suits of dark wool mixtures in a_variety of styles, priced from $12.95 to $19.95. Cravenetted Corduroy Pants and wool mixtures to be used with the extra coat. Sizes 7 to 17 years, $3.50. Boys’ Blouses, in plain or fancy colors, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50. Boys’ Caps For every suit a cap, and in this assortment, priced at $1.00 you will find a number of styles in every size. nate some of the long words from| school plenic with him 1 was so ‘ners. Marie eald that—not Mary) Well, Aunt Jane said stuff and rensense, and that I was much too ng to run around with silly boy: Aunt Jane would let me go with him. | He's no silly boy! Besides, 1 knew | him real well, and iked him. I used ing, not to see me, but im th! Pleased. And I supposed, of course,| natural pursuance of his Of delivering groceries. And I sai that he was not a creature. Om th, Twenty-five years ago this fall}largest distributing center of Louis Sidelsky, a young, energetic! woolens in the West. He went journeyman tailor, decided that | with a big letter of credit, prepared the men of Seattle would support to pick up anything in the way of &@ popular-priced merchant tailor: |a snap on high-grade fabrics. For- ing establishment where they could — was with him, for he arrived depend on getting substantial fab-| there just at a time when many rics taflored in a practical way|returned orders had temporarily without having to pay an pang bs ayer a slump in the market, and mous price. Backing up this idea,|the big dealers were willing to sell Sideleky started in business In a| for almost any price if the buyer small way on one of the side| would order in big lots and pay streets of the then small cit. | promptly. Sidelsky returned Sunday with a figa! grown 1 0 that dlgpet Sidalakyre Lestnase | ile ® Bille. wide, gor he brought ~ with him bills of lading for the big has grown with the city. Today his shop produces clothes for men — sot “oa pliner soeeeg in nearly every city and town | “**r "°° in the Northwestern states and|TH® goods are now arriving and Alaska. A consistent advertiser in |*"¢ be!mg unpacked preparatory to the newspapers, his photograph in| te most stupendous sale ever at Ge well Known’ an the Clothes he {tempted in tailoring circles in makes. Advertising his business Seattle. When | seen saree and and backing up his advertising to SidelsRy was busy superintending the limit has made the Imperial he. receiving of the new woolens. itietng (ombany without 4 “Tell the readers of The Star Gon the best-known tailoring son. | that I have bought the finest line EIA be this codiantentty ud of woolens that I have ever dis played in the quarter of a century In appreciation of the twenty- that I have been in business, and I fifth anniversary of his business am sure going to have a real anni eareer, Sidelsky has planned for|versary celebration. Ask them to many months to celebrate in a watch The r on Thursday and fashion that will best show his ap- Friday nighta and they will hear preciation for the extensive patron- some news regarding clothes prices age that has come to him. Re- that will make them glad of my “cently Sidelsky took a trip to the anniversary.” STARTING METROPOLITAN SUNDAY THE SUN(S NOT BRIGHTER, = SOLOMON WAS NO WISER THAN THE BIRO WHO BUYS HIS SEATS EARLY FOR. SHO art TOMORROW GIRLS WHO INTOXICATE UNTIL YOU GURGLE NT VIOLATE THE IB™*AMENDMENT 27 cuas AoBare 27 SCENES OF a 23 SURPASSING SPLENDOK Zo TICHETS PURCHASED FROM PECULATORS REFUSED AT DOOR_L ates 5 Lis, 64. five whole minutes—bdefore he asked another question about that party, or the violinist. live a minute if ‘t wasn't for mother's letters, Besides being #0 lonesome there's whatift wan) WH, ag I wild father hitched and | You reo, Charlie Smith had wal to talk to him quite a lot when he/contrary, he was, I was sure a. home from school with me twica, but |i had to stop that. And Fred Small | brought the groceriea But did Aunt Jane let me go? She aged. ond sald he didn't know, he Wa sures that she'd better take witer,@oufine! ttn bis, and that he way yery sorrg, but she really must Mm, Aad he got through thegidhor whiid he was talking just . As he omsR himecif, wo that couhiny met in a single word to comp him. Ther he was gone. Mrs. Darling sthyed on the plazza (we Whole hours fonger, but father never eue at all: again. Ter@anpe next m that Susie ani Adeover the back yard fence to 8 ‘Gxdoes: beat aN how popular this houeg is with thé ladies—after col ieg@ hourss* ang Bridget back: “Spar, (ite iat tha Widder Dagitn’ is a heap fonder of Miles Jane how than she would haves been had poor Mr. Darlin ives * abe ctuckfed again, and so Mel de? And then, ali of a sudden Naturally the lessons haven’t/arcther thing worries me, too; and amounted to much, as you can im-/that ia, this—what I'm writing agine. But the terra was nearly fin-| mean. The novel. It's getting awful ished, anyway, and my real school|ly stupid. Nothing happens is in Boston, of course. Jing! Of course, if "t was just a It’s vacation now. I do hope that|I could make up things—lots of th will amount to something exciting. things, Ice eee having mother elope with the vio Unist, and father shoot bim and fal in love with mother all over again | ' | | interesting August first, It hasn't, so far——T mean vacation Has the Hot Weather Sapped Your Strength? lif you keep the blood toned The Wear and Tear on Your|up and pure, you will in- ystem Should be Replaced |crease your vitality and); on itiatcaneher aii thane at Once. \strength and be able to} ia iimien Ws wag father 3 _-— \throw off and resist the mil-| Darding.wanted.. The To a great many peaple the| lions of tiny disease germs wes? sal es a We sultans |hot summer season .|which are always ready to is very ; i MOM M- dicn’t neg what Susie and ini: C. yi ‘ y 4a «|B Ye a nt! no oh |draining on the system, and attack you on every hand. | \irtage om ' jleaves them with a low, de- For keeping well, after all, is| Hat jm tins go | pleted vitality and a general largely a matter of being able tare tee nee Det |run-down condition. to re chuckled and an . father makes ry tim divtike them. Anyhow, he won't st disease. s : Wye Anything te,do with them. He | So you can appreciate the|«iwayr uns away over to the ob importance of taking right|"e¥@tory. or somewhere, and won't now a thorough course of oi wees and uve heard him : ; fae¥, gout them to Aunt Jane, treatment that will build up that 1 right, your strength and vitality} ‘ say and put your system in a ro- bust condition to be prepared for the coming change of seasons, And for this pur- eueeeseen: pose the old-time remedies ; are always best. The oldest The symptoms are quickly blood tonic on the market you are easily today is S.S.S., which your tired, feel all run-down and druggist has known and han- {seem to have lost your €N-) died ever since he has been a ergy and vigor. You cannot druggist. He will tell you afford to take the that this fifty-year-old medi- chances of facing a hard cine jg thoroughly reliable. | winter with its perils of dis- | 8.8.8. is a splendid remed ease, while your vitality is|pecause it is made only of below normal. ; the juices and ext s of Many human ailments are’ roots and herbs of recognized due to some impurity in the| medicinal value. It was first blood supply. These impur-| made by the Indians, and is ties make the blood sluggish, guaranteed to be purely veg- cause you to lose your en-/etable and free from all min- ergy, and unless thoroughly eral substance: removed are a_ constant source of danger, as nearly every vital organ of your body depends upon the blood supply to properly perform its functions. How does your general health depend so largely upon the condition of your blood?| Your blood is made up of The wear and tear on the system is very gen- eral during the heated term and it is important that new strength be imparted to your worn- out body. but ody So, as Betord, bapn't:s t her’ Weapilig A le | helyegeut thig Gook—not right anytex@. * any chance I don't see beginning, ieris as if there ight b , begining of it by tinge Tp going on 19. Oh ha beep begitiings, lots of them ity Anat on, Med be endivra,. though I told her goo atid plain that [ thought it per toctly ajl righ{gand I reminded her Sipe the breok and river me where stood, aud,all that Th J T'contdn't take her ave it at uct raid, “Stuff and nonsense #M. When Aunt Jane says Both | (tu ea “nonwinee I know there's votes ‘doing, On, dear, Mang! Aimt Jara says te the I wish she'd elimi ip my love’ story , she does wist Jang from my A course of S. right E now will do much to re- pair the waste and wear of summer and give new energy and vigor to your tired body. TONIGHT YOMORROW, #INE, NEW VAL Aa’ I do be thinkin’ ) this |“ there | wpuldn't let them go | that’s | AST ‘TIMES, . DAY AND SATU URDAY— JDEVILLE SHOW Som of the Dx-President of Nicaragua did not. Why, she seemed almost more shocked than she had been jover Charlie Smith and Fred Small, jand the others. “Mercy, child she exclatmed. “Where in the world do you pick up these people?” And she brought out that “these people” so disagreeably! Why, you'd think Mr. Livingstone |was a foreign Japanese, or some thing. I told her then quietly, and with dignity, and with no temper (show- jing), that Mr. Livingstone was not }a foreign Japanese, but was a very nice gentleman, and that I had not picked him up. wns getting so he was over nero a lot. Aunt Jane stopped him. Paul M yes, Paul Mayhew, Stell brother!—came home with me, and 4 me to go with him auto riding. My, how I did want to go! |I wanted to \ride, of but Jespeciatly I wanted to go because he | wi Mra. Mayhew's son. I just |wanted to show Mrs, Mayhew! But Aunt Jane wouldn't let me. That's the time she talked specially about |running around with ally boys. But Ihe needn't have. Paul is no silly | boy. He's old enough to get a license to drive his own car But it wasn't because he was young that Aunt Jano refused. 1) door himself, almost every day. jfound out afterward. It was be-| “My own door!” exclaimed Aunt lcause he was any kind of a man/jJane. And she looked absolutely paying me attention. I found that | frightened. “You mean 7 out through Mr. Claude Livingstone. | that that creature has been coming Mr, Livingstone brings our grocer: | here to see you, and I not know it?” jon He's a real young gentleman I told her then—again quietly and tall, black mustache, and lovely dark | with dignity, and without temper Hp goes to our church, and | (showing)— that he had been com- asked me to go to the Sunday i esa peach course, eyes. MOTHER! | | “California Syrup of Figs” | Child’s Best Laxative } He came to her own | to tell me | estimable young man. He a ae our church and Sunday school Bi sides, I could vouch for him myseli, _ as I knew him well, having seen an} talked with him almost every dav’ |for a long while, when he came |the house. (Continued Tomorrow), EPILEPSY f i STO wie Hes 50 Yous ~ ‘On. fomal Royal Rochester WASH BOILERS Special for Thursday $3.50 No. 8 Size at. . .$2.59 $4.00 No. 9 Size at. . .$2.89 These Royal Rochester Wash Boilers are made of heavy tin with copper bottoms; they have the sta- } | tionary handles and fit-in Special at | Accept “California” jonly—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless physic fo? the little mach, liver and bowels, Children love its fruity taste, Full directions on each bottle, You must say “Cali fornia | THEATRE | TINUOUS Con Troll NAKAE & CO. millions of corpuscles, those| Go to your drug store and which nourish and sustain) buy a bottle of S.S.S. today. your system, and those which| You will be pleased with the Ne equipped with a plug and I Wigical Revoe are destructive. Between the| new vigor and strength that " two there is a constant con-| it will impart. Any medical flict. If impurities are per-|advice needed can be had mitted to accumulate, your) without cost if you will write blood becomes thin and im-|to Chief Medical Adviser, 283 poverished and your vitality|Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, '$. gradually undermined, But! Ga, Feature Min “EVERYTHING Its Photopiay LYONS AND MORAN BUT THE TRUTE a Rubber Cement ‘8-Foot Electric Light Extension Special at 89c Regular Price $1.30 An Electric Light Extension comes in very handy around the home or garage. key socket. Special, 89¢. THE STORE FOR USEFUL ARTICL! cover, Floor Paint 79c Quart Regular Price $1.05 Rubber Cement Floor Paint comes in a good as- sortment of colors; it dries with a good ‘hard finish and wears like iron. Spe- cial at 79¢ quart. These Extensions are ES